Medicaments containing vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate

ABSTRACT

The invention relates to a method for producing medicaments that contain vardenafil hydrochloride, essentially as trihydrate in solid form, and to medicaments that can be obtained according to this method

The application relates to medicaments which comprise vardenafil hydrochloride substantially as trihydrate in solid form, and processes for the production thereof.

The active pharmaceutical ingredient vardenafil (IUPAC name: 2-ethoxy-5-[(4-ethyl-1-piperazinyl)sulfonyl]phenyl}-5-methyl-7-propylimid-azo[5,1-f][1,2,4]triazin-4(3H)-one), vardenafil hydrochloride and vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate and the use thereof from the treatment of erectile dysfunction is described in WO 99/24433 as Examples 19, 20 and 336.

It has been found that vardenafil hydrochloride occurs in four different polymorphic forms (anhydrous modifications I with melting point of 217° C., modification II with melting point of 190° C., modification III with melting point of 183-186° C., modification IV with transition point of 166° C.) and that none of these polymorphic forms is preferentially formed at room temperature. In addition, the individual polymorphic forms may take up different amounts of water, depending on the ambient humidity and temperature, and form with water further polymorphic forms, called pseudopolymorphic forms.

Since different polymorphic forms of a substance frequently differ in their dissolving behavior, these differences may become manifest for example in the bioavailability (AUC), maximum plasma concentration (C_(max)) and time of appearance of the maximum plasma concentration (AUCmax). It is also possible for absorption to be reduced, resulting in an inadequate or entirely absent effect.

Thus there is on the one hand the problem that solid medicaments must comprise the active ingredient vadenafil hydrochloride in defined and reproducible form. However, on the other hand, the polymorphic forms of vardenafil HCl cannot be prepared or isolated in pure form because they each take up small amounts of water and thus exist as mixture of the polymorphic form and of a hydrate.

For these reasons, vardenafil hydrochloride is unsuitable as ingredient of medicaments in which the active ingredient is to be present in solid form.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 a shows the Raman difference spectrum (=spectrum of tablet−spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O) of tablets of Example 6 before rehydration of vardenafil HCL anhydrous non-rehydrated tablets.

FIG. 1 b shows the Raman difference spectrum (=spectrum of tablet−spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O) of tablets of Example 6 after rehydration of vardenafil HCL anhydrous non-rehydrated tablets.

FIG. 2 shows the Raman spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

FIG. 3 shows the detection of the trihydrate form of vardenafil HCL in a 20 mg tablet.

FIG. 4 shows the IR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

FIG. 5 shows the NIR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

FIG. 6 shows the FIR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

FIG. 7 shows the ¹³C solid NMR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

FIG. 8 shows the X-ray diffractogram of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

It has now been found that on use of vardenafil hydrochloride in the form of the trihydrate it is possible to obtain solid medicaments in uniform and reproducible form when these medicaments are moistened during or after their production.

The invention therefore relates to a process for producing medicaments comprising vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate in solid form, characterized in that

-   -   a) vardenafil hydrochloride with any content of water of         crystallization is employed in the production of the medicament,     -   b) the vardenafil hydrochloride is converted into the trihydrate         form at an intermediate processing stage or in the final         product, and     -   c) where appropriate the process conditions in the following         process steps are controlled so that the content of water of         crystallization of the vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate         changes negligibly.

Vardenafil hydrochloride can be employed in this process with any water content, i.e. as trihydrate or in a form whose content of water of crystallization differs substantially from 9.3% by weight.

Vardenafil hydrochloride is converted into the trihydrate form in one of the next processing stages or in the final product and, where appropriate, the process conditions in the following process steps are controlled so that the content of water of crystallization of the vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate does not change.

Conversion into the trihydrate form takes place according to the invention by bringing the intermediate processing stage or the final product into contact with moistened gas in a suitable system until there has been substantial formation of the trihydrate of vardenafil hydrochloride.

Moistened gas is, in particular, air with a relative humidity of from 35% to 100%, particularly preferably 50% to 99%. Suitable systems are all systems or chambers in which the moistened gas can be introduced or provided and brought into contact with the pharmaceutical forms as uniformly as possible, or in which the pharmaceutical forms can be incubated under the stated conditions. The time for which the moistened gas is passed over or in, or the residence time of the pharmaceutical form in the system and the relative humidity of the gas depends on the initial water content of the pharmaceutical form and the ratio of amounts between moistened gas and pharmaceutical form. It may vary from a few minutes up to several days, with 0.5-12 hours being sufficient in most cases. In the case of packaged pharmaceutical forms, generally times of 1 day-6 months are sufficient.

Solid medicaments are all pharmaceutical forms which comprise vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate in solid form, such as powders, granules, tablets, film-coated tablets, sugar-coated tablets, fast-dissolving flakes or hard gelatin capsules.

Solid medicaments for the purposes of the invention are preferably tablets, especially coated tablets, because in the processing of vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate to produce tablets, especially during coating of the tablets, by conventional methods there is to a particular extent partial or complete dehydration of the trihydrate again, and the active ingredient is again present non-uniformly in a plurality of polymorphic and pseudopolymorphic forms.

Besides vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate, which exists at room temperature in only one crystalline modification (the water content in vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate is 9.3% by weight), the medicaments product according to the invention comprise further pharmaceutical excipients known to the skilled worker.

The tablets of the invention comprise in addition to vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate preferably fillers, disintegrants and lubricants and, where appropriate, further excipients. The tablets of the invention preferably comprise 0.1-70% by weight vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate, 0.1-10% by weight disintegrant, 0.1-2% by weight lubricant and, where appropriate, further adjuncts, and the filler as remaining ingredients.

The tablet comprises preferably microcrystalline cellulose as filler, preferably crospovidone as disintegrant, preferably magnesium stearate as lubricant.

Further adjuncts which may be added where appropriate to the tablet are, by way of example and preferably, flow regulators such as colloidal silicon dioxide.

Particular preference is given to coated tablets which, also in the form ready for administration, comprise the active ingredient vardenafil hydrochloride reproducibly in the trihydrate modification.

Coated tablets are unambiguously defined by the European Pharmacopeia, 3rd edition 1997, page 1852: “Coated tablets are tablets covered with one or more layers of mixtures of various substances such as natural or synthetic resins, gums, gelatin, inactive and insoluble fillers, sugars, plasticizers, polyols, waxes, coloring matter authorized by the competent authority and sometimes flavoring substances and active substances. The substances used as coatings are usually applied as a solution or suspension under conditions in which evaporation of the solvent or dispersant occurs. When the coating is a very thin polymeric coating, the tablets are known as film-coated tablets.”

Reference is additionally made to the definition of tablets in the European Pharmacopeia, 3rd edition 1997.

Since the aim during the process is to dry off the solvent or dispersant and form a film from the coating material, on production of coated tablets comprising vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate by the conventional methods there is a particularly high degree of loss of water of crystallization from the active ingredient.

A preferred embodiment of the invention is therefore a method which produces coated vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate tablets which comprise vardenafil hydrochloride reproducibly in the form of the trihydrate also in the form ready for administration.

In this preferred method, the coated vardenafil HCl tablets are subjected to a rehydration method. In this there is surprisingly formation in the coated tablet in all cases of one and the same trihydrate of vardenafil HCl, irrespective of which polymorphic form or mixture of polymorphic forms of vardenafil hydrochloride was initially present in the coated tablet.

A further aspect of the invention is therefore a method for producing coated tablets comprising vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate, which is characterized in that coated tablets comprising vardenafil hydrochloride in any one or plurality of (hydrate) modifications and produced by conventional methods are subjected to a rehydration process.

The rehydration process is preferably carried out in such a way that the coated tablets are brought into contact in a suitable system with moistened gas until the trihydrate of vardenafil HCl has formed in the pharmaceutical form.

Suitable systems in which the rehydration process is carried out are, by way of example and preferably, in controlled environment cabinets, controlled environment rooms, fluidized bed granuators, coating apparatuses or drums.

Moistened gas is, by way of example and preferably, air with a relative humidity of from 35% to 100%, particularly preferably 50% to 99%.

During the rehydration step, the coated tablets may be at rest in the system, for example on the trays of a controlled environment cabinet or on the floor of a fluidized bed granulator or else be continuously or occasionally agitated for better mixing, for example in the drum or coating system. It is also possible to carry out the rehydration process after the coated tablets have been packaged in a pack which is permeable to water vapor. For this purpose, the packaged coated tablets are incubated in a controlled environment room.

The time the rehydration lasts depends on the initial water content of the coated tablet, the relative humidity of the moistened gas and the ratio of amounts between moist gas and the coated tablet. It may vary from a few minutes up to several days, and a rehydration time of 0.5-12 hours is sufficient in most cases. In the case of rehydration in a pack which is permeable to water vapor, the rehydration time additionally depends on the permeability to water vapor of the packaging material. In pharmaceutically customary blister packs, times of from 1 day up to 6 months are generally sufficient.

If the rehydration is carried out at an intermediate processing stage, the subsequent process conditions are controlled so that the content of water of crystallization of the vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate does not change. For this purpose, the subsequent process steps are carried out at relative humidities of the air in contact with the product of 30-100%, preferably 35-99%.

It is astonishingly possible by the method of the invention to convert undefined vardenafil hydrochloride modification mixtures completely into the trihydrate form even in the dense structure of the finished coated tablet. There are moreover no unwanted side effects on the quality of the coated tablet, such as, for example, crumbling, cracking of coating layers or reduction in the rate of release of active ingredient.

It has also been found that the tablets produced by the method of the invention have a number of advantages over coated tablets produced using vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate in conventional methods.

The application therefore also relates to the tablets produced by the method of the invention.

The advantage of the tablets of the invention or produced by the method of the invention is that the crystal structure of the active ingredient in the medicament is unambiguously defined, reproducible and stable over a wide range of relative humidities, corresponding coated tablets show faster disintegration and, contrary to the expectation from the prior art to date (David J. W. Grant, T. Higuchi, Techniques of Chemistry, Volume XXI, pages 38, 42 and 43), the rate of dissolution of the active ingredient from the tablets of the invention or produced by the method of the invention is constantly fast.

The tablets of the invention or produced by the method of the invention can be unambiguously defined on the basis of the crystal structure by the raman spectrum (the FT raman spectrum of vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate shows a significant peak at 1701 cm⁻¹, Polymorphic and pseudopolymorphic forms with a lower water content and mixtures thereof by contrast have a band at 1692 cm⁻¹), IR spectrum, NIR spectrum, FIR spectrum, ¹³C solid NMR spectrum and the X-ray diffractogram (cf. FIGS. 2, 4-8 and Tab. 3-8 appended).

Concerning the production of vardenafil hydrochloride and vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate, express reference is hereby made to the disclosure of WO 99/24433, in particular Examples 20 and 336.

The vardenafil hydrochloride in the medicaments is preferably at least 90 mol %, particularly preferably at least 95 mol %, in the trihydrate form.

The medicaments of the invention and the medicaments which can be produced by the method of the invention, especially the tablets of the invention or produced by the method of the invention, are suitable for the treatment and/or prophylaxis of diseases in humans and/or animals, in particular for the treatment of sexual dysfunctions, very especially for the treatment of erectile dysfunction.

The medicaments of the invention display several unexpected advantages: 1. The medicaments comprise vardenafil hydrochloride only in one crystalline modification. The medicaments can therefore be produced reproducibly, and they release of vardenafil at a reproducible and uniform rate. 2. The rate of release of the active ingredient from the medicaments of the invention is comparable to that from medicaments containing the solvate-free active ingredient. The rate of release from solvate-containing, in this case water-containing, crystals in the same solvent, in this case water, is usually less than from solvate-free crystals. 3. The disintegration time of the medicaments, especially the coated tablets, is shorter. The medicaments are therefore particularly suitable for the treatment of diseases for which the rapid onset of action is desired, such as, for example, for the treatment of erectile dysfunction. 4. In contrast to the highly hygroscopic medicaments containing solvate-free vardenafil hydrochloride, the medicaments of the invention are stable on storage for long periods and scarcely change their composition, in particular their water content.

The medicaments of the invention can be administered in various ways. Examples which may be mentioned are: oral, sublingual, buccal, nasal, inhalation, subcutaneous, or topical. Oral administration is preferred.

It has generally proved advantageous to administer amounts of about 0.001 to 10 mg/kg, on oral use preferably about 0.005 to 3 mg/kg, of body weight to achieve effective results.

It may nevertheless be necessary where appropriate to deviate from the stated amounts, in particular as a function of the body weight or the nature of the administration route, the individual response to the medicament, the nature of its formulation and the time or interval over which administration takes place. Thus, it may be sufficient in some cases to make do with less than the aforementioned minimum amount, whereas in other cases the stated upper limit must be exceeded. If larger amounts are administered, it may be advisable to distribute these in a plurality of single doses over the day.

The following examples serve to illustrate the invention further, but the invention is not confined to the examples.

EXAMPLES Comparative Example 1 and Example 2 Tablets from the Conventional Production Methods of Drum Granulation and Coating and Improved Disintegration of Tablets of the Invention

216 g of microfine vardenafil HCl are mixed with 605 g of microcrystalline cellulose and 43.2 g of crospovidone. Addition of 2101 g of microcrystalline cellulose and 132 g of crospovidone is followed by mixing and subsequent mixing with 350 g of microcrystalline cellulose, 17.5 g of colloidal silicon dioxide and 35 g of magnesium stearate. The mixture is compressed in a rotary press to tablets with a diameter of 6 mm and a mass of 87 mg (equivalent to 5 mg of vardenafil base). In a coating apparatus, 43.5 mg of a coating suspension composed of 4.5% hypromellose, 1.5% macrogol 400, 1.23% titanium dioxide, 0.25% yellow iron oxide and 0.02% red iron oxide are sprayed on per tablet.

Comparative Example 1

Vardenafil hydrochloride is present in the tablets partly as trihydrate and as anhydrate (1 to 4 modifications). The tablets have a disintegration time of 2 minutes.

Example 2

The tablets are rehydrated in a fluidized bed granulator with 150 m³/h inlet air of 30° C. and 19 g/kg water content for 4 hours (equivalent to 70% relative humidity). The modification of the vardenafil HCl in the tablet thus corresponds according to the invention to the trihydrate. The tablets now have a disintegration time of only ½ minute.

Example 3 Stability of Tablets Produced According to the Invention

28.4 kg of micronized vardenafil HCl trihydrate is mixed with 69.6 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 5.16 kg of sieved crospovidone in a mechanical mixer. The mixture is mixed with 182 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 9.84 kg of crospovidone in a container mixer and granulated by dry drum granulation. After admixture of 1.50 kg of colloidal silicon dioxide and 3.00 kg of magnesium stearate, tablets with a mass of 125 mg and a diameter of 7 mm are produced in a rotary tablet press. The uncoated tablets are coated with a suspension of 5.74 kg of hypromellose, 1.91 kg of macrogol 400, 1.57 kg of titanium dioxide, 319 g of yellow iron oxide, 25.5 g of red iron oxide and 118 kg of purified water in a commercially available coating system. The modification of vardenafil HCl in the coated tablets does not correspond to the trihydrate form and therefore represents an undefined mixture of anhydrous and hydrous forms of vardenafil HCl. The coated tablets are treated with air having a water content of 16 g of water/kg (corresponds to 80% relative humidity) in the coating system at 25° C. for 5 hours. The modification of vardenafil HCl in the rehydrated tablets corresponds to the trihydrate.

Stability test: The tablets with vardenafil HCl trihydrate are stored in the open at 25° C. and 30% relative humidity for one week. Despite the low humidity, no loss of water of crystallization occurs during this, and the vardenafil HCl active ingredient modification still corresponds to the trihydrate form.

Example 4 Active Ingredient Release from Tablets Produced According to the Invention

336 g of vardenafil HCl is mixed with 2216 g of microcrystalline cellulose and 134 g of crospovidone and granulated dry. Transfer of the granules is followed by mixing with 283 g of microcrystalline cellulose, 16 g of crospovidone and 15 g of magnesium stearate and compression to tablets with a diameter of 5 mm and a mass of 48 mg (equivalent to 5 mg of vardenafil base per tablet). The tablets are given a white coating with 57.4 g of hypromellose, 19.1 g of macrogol 4000 and 19.1 g of titanium dioxide and stored in the open at 25° C. and 80% relative humidity for 4 days. The modification of vardenafil HCl in the tablets corresponds to the trihydrate form.

As shown by the release data in Table 1, the tablets of the invention produced in this way show an extremely rapid release of active ingredient despite the complete restoration of the trihydrate form of vardenafil HCl in the finished tablet.

TABLE 1 Active ingredient release from tablets of Example 4 Time Active ingredient release  5 min 100% 10 min 101% 30 min 101% 45 min 101%

Release conditions: n=6, USP paddle, 900 ml 0.1-M-HCl, 75 rpm, 10.mu.m filter

Example 5 Small Variation in the Relative Bioavailability of Tablets of the Invention

0.645 kg of vardenafil HCl are mixed with 2.42 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 161 of crospovidone, sieved and granulated dry with a drum. The granules are then mixed with 0.339 kg of microcrystalline cellulose, 18.8 g of crospovidone and 18 g of magnesium stearate and compressed to circular tablets with a diameter of 7 mm and a mass of 120 mg (equivalent to 20 mg of vardenafil base). The tablets are coated with 0.765 mg of macrogol 4000, 2.295 mg of hypromellose and 0.765 mg of titanium dioxide (amounts per tablet in each case). The trihydrate form of vardenafil HCl is produced in the finished tablets by exposing them on plates in a controlled environment room at 16-24° C. and 60-75% relative humidity for 72 hours.

For comparison purposes, a solution consisting of 21.49 mg of vardenafil HCl (equivalent to 20 mg of vardenafil base), 38.69 mg of methyl parahydroxybenzoate, 4.298 mg of propyl parahydroxybenzoate, 6448 mg of sucrose, 17419 mg of water and lactic acid ad pH 3.9 is produced. The pharmacokinetics after administration of tablets and solution were compared in a randomized, open crossover study on 12 male subjects (Table 2).

TABLE 2 Pharmacokinetic parameters after administration of tablets of Example 5 and a solution (geometric means/geometric standard deviations) Parameter Tablets corr. to Example 5 Comparative solution AUC (μg × h/L) 60.2/1.64 64.6/1.78 Cmax (μg/L) 21.1/1.86 22.5/2.09

The results show that tablets of the invention have a relative bioavailability of 93% compared with an aqueous solution. Since the geometric standard deviations of the bioavailability and maximum plasma concentration are less than after administration of the aqueous solution, it is possible to rule out variations resulting from variable polymorphic or pseudopolymorphic forms of vardenafil HCl in solid form in the tablet.

Example 6

0.871 kg of vardenafil HCl trihydrate, 2.13 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 0.158 kg of sieved crospovidone are vigorously mixed in a plowshare mixer. This mixture is mixed with 3.08 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 0.167 kg of crospovidone, drum-granulated and then mixed with 0.0325 kg of colloidal silicon dioxide and 0.0650 kg of magnesium stearate.

The mixture is tableted in a rotary press to tablets with a diameter of 8 mm and a mass of 177 mg (equivalent to 20 mg of vardenafil base) and coated with 2.76 kg of an aqueous coating suspension with 4.5% hypromellose, 1.5% macrogol 400, 1.23% titanium dioxide, 0.25% yellow iron oxide and 0.02% red iron oxide in a coating pan. The modification of vardenafil HCl in the tablets does not correspond to the trihydrate form (FIG. 1 a).

The rehydration is carried out by introducing the coated tablets into a Glatt GPCG 1/3 type fluidized bed granulator and treating with 150 m³/h inlet air of 25° C. and 16 g/kg humidity (equivalent to 80% relative humidity) for 4 hours. The modification of vardenafil HCl in the tablets treated in this way corresponds to the trihydrate form (FIG. 1 b).

FIG. 1 a shows the Raman difference spectrum (=spectrum of tablet−spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O) of tablets of Example 6 before rehydration of vardenafil HCL anhydrous non-rehydrated tablets.

FIG. 1 b shows the Raman difference spectrum (=spectrum of tablet−spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O) of tablets of Example 6 after rehydration of vardenafil HCL anhydrous non-rehydrated tablets.

Example 7

37 kg of coated tablets produced as in Example 6 are treated after the coating in a tablet drum with 40 m³/h inlet air at 21° C. and 84% relative humidity through a gas-introduction pipe for 3 days.

Example 8

12.3 kg of vardenafil HCl trihydrate, 30.2 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 2.24 kg of sieved crospovidone are mixed. This mixture is mixed with a further 238 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 12.8 kg of sieved crospovidone, drum-granulated and then mixed with 1.5 kg of colloidal silicon dioxide and 3.0 kg of sieved magnesium stearate. This mixture is compressed in a rotary tablet press to circular tablets with a diameter of 5.5 mm and a mass of 72 mg. The tablets are given a red coating with 5.74 kg of hypromellose, 1.91 kg of macrogol 400, 1.57 kg of titanium dioxide, 319 g of yellow iron oxide and 25.5 g of red iron oxide. The coated tablets are rehydrated in two part-batches of about 140 kg by treating them in a Glatt 1250 type coating system with 2000 m³/h inlet air of 16 g humidity/kg at 25° C. (equivalent to 80% relative humidity) for 5 hours.

Example 9

600 g of tablets consisting of 5.926 mg of vardenafil HCl trihydrate, 4.35 mg of crospovidone, 0.87 mg of magnesium stearate, 75.419 mg of microcrystalline cellulose and 0.435 mg of colloidal silicon dioxide are coated in a Kugelcoater with an organic coating solution consisting of 6.65% cellulose acetate, 0.35% PEG 3350, 92.535% acetone and 0.465% water until 82.76 g of coating has been applied. The coated tablets are treated on trays at 25° C./80% relative humidity for 24 hours.

Example 10

Tablets are produced as described Example 6. After coating, the tablets are sealed into blister packs which consist of 20 μm aluminum sheet combined with 3.5 g/m² PP sheet, and 300 μm colorless and transparent PP sheet. The blister packs are incubated under controlled conditions at 25° C. and 60% relative humidity for six months. The modification of vardenafil HCl in the tablets treated in this way corresponds to the trihydrate form.

Example 11

2.96 kg of vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate, 7.25 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 538 g of crospovidone are mixed in a plowshare mixer. The mixture is mixed in a free-fall mixer with 26.1 kg of microcrystalline cellulose and 1.64 kg of crospovidone. The mixture is granulated dry in a drum granulator and then mixed with 4.35 kg of microcrystalline cellulose, 218 g of colloidal silicon dioxide and 435 g of magnesium stearate. This mixture is compressed in a tablet press to circular tablets with diameter of 6 mm. The tablets are coated in a coating pan with a coating dispersion which has the following ingredients: 832 g of hypromellose, 277 g of macrogol 400, 227 g of titanium dioxide, 17.1 kg of water, 46.2 g yellow and 3.70 g of red iron oxide.

The finished tablets are sealed in blister packs which were produced using a 300 μm colorless and transparent PP sheet and 20 μm aluminum sheet with sealing layer. In this state, the modification of vardenafil HCl does not correspond to the trihydrate form. The blister packs are then incubated at 25° C. and 80% humidity for three days. The active ingredient in the tablet then corresponds to vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate.

Example 12

The presence of the trihydrate form of vardenafil HCl in the finished coated tablet is investigated by FT raman spectroscopy. The FT raman spectrum of vardenafil HCl trihydrate tablets is distinguished in contrast to corresponding placebo tablets by bands at 1701 cm⁻¹, 1624 cm⁻¹, 1594 cm⁻¹, 1580 cm⁻¹, 1561 cm⁻¹, and 1518 cm⁻¹ (FIG. 2). Unambiguous assignment of these bands to the active ingredient vardenafil HCl trihydrate is proved as follows. A single-crystal X-ray structural analysis of vardenfil HCl trihydrate exists, and the theoretical two-dimensional X-ray powder diffractogram is calculated with the aid thereof. If the X-ray powder diffractogram obtained experimentally for a given sample of the active ingredient agrees with the theoretical diffractogram, then the given sample is unambiguously vardenafil HCl trihydrate. The FT raman spectrum of the same sample is thus unambiguously to be assigned to vardenafil HCl trihydrate (Tab. 3). If this substance is dried, bands of 1 to 4 anhydrate modifications appear in the FT raman spectrum, e.g. at about 1692 cm⁻¹ and 1599 cm⁻¹. The intensity of the bands belonging to vardenafil HCl trihydrate in the FT raman spectrum is reduced according to the amount remaining in the sample (FIG. 3). Absence of the bands at about 1692 cm⁻¹ and 1599 cm⁻¹ in the FT raman spectrum can thus be used to test for complete rehydration of vardenafil HCl trihydrate. The practical procedure for this is as follows: the FT raman spectrum of vardenfil HCl trihydrate and the FT raman spectrum of the active ingredient-free tablet of the corresponding formulation is subtracted from the FT raman spectrum of a given tablet. Remaining raman intensities which are larger than the spectral noise and >0 are bands of components other than those present in the active ingredient-free tablet and vardenafil HCl trihydrate. In the case of vardenafil HCl tablets these are, for example, bands of 1 to 4 anhydrate modifications of vardenafil HCl.

FIG. 2: shows the Raman spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

TABLE 3 Table of bands in the raman spectrum of vardenafil HCl 3 H₂O Peak [cm⁻¹] 197 260 297 313 390 460 499 583 624 649 733 746 778 817 882 927 1045 1089 1110 1167 1216 1224 1236 1253 1281 1306 1326 1357 1381 1395 1424 1456 1517 1561 1581 1594 1623 1701 2940 2983 3002

FIG. 3: shows the detection of the trihydrate form of vardenafil HCL in a 20 mg tablet.

FIG. 4: shows the IR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

TABLE 4 Table of bands in the IR spectrum of vardenafil HCl 3 H₂O Peak [cm⁻¹] 515 560 583 604 648 663 684 697 714 721 732 745 751 820 841 882 906 927 954 983 1026 1043 1074 1089 1108 1132 1153 1168 1182 1202 1226 1236 1253 1264 1289 1339 1357 1382 1388 1395 1411 1421 1454 1475 1517 1580 1594 1623 1707 1935 2478 2517 2544 2621 2641 2680 2722 2875 2934 2967 3068 3332 3467

FIG. 5: shows the NIR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

TABLE 5 Table of bands in the NIR spectrum of vardenafil HCl 3 H₂O Peak Peak [cm⁻¹] 4041 4083 4165 4192 4266 4353 4428 4556 4655 4744 4804 5107 5694 5833 5911 6080 6501 6818 8479

FIG. 6: shows the FIR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

TABLE 6 Table of bands in the FIR spectrum of vardenafil HCl 3 H₂O Peak [cm⁻¹] 82 102 115 154 243 259 297 315 326 345 384 426 434 460 481

FIG. 7 shows the ¹³C solid NMR spectrum of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

TABLE 7 Table of bands in the .sup.13C solid NMR spectrum of vardenafil HCl 3 H₂O Peak [ppm] 10.6 13.3 15.4 15.7 21.7 28.7 31.3 42.6 44.1 50.2 52.8 67.7 112.3 115.0 130.8 132.6 138.8 143.3 145.3 152.1 160.2

FIG. 8 shows the X-ray diffractogram of vardenafil HCL 3 H₂O.

TABLE 8 List of peaks in the X-ray diffractogram of vardenafil HCl 3 H₂O Peak [2 Theta] 5.1 8.1 10.2 10.8 14.4 15.3 16.3 17.2 17.4 19.0 19.7 20.1 20.7 22.3 22.9 23.2 24.0 24.3 24.5 25.1 25.8 26.2 27.0 27.9 29.0 30.9 32.0 33.3 

1. A method for producing medicaments comprising vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate in solid form, characterized in that a) vardenafil hydrochloride with any water content is employed for producing the medicament, b) the verdenafil hydrochloride is converted substantially into the trihydrate form at an intermediate processing stage or in the final product.
 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that coated tablets are produced as medicament.
 3. The method as claimed in claims 1 and 2, characterized in that the intermediate processing stage or the final product, or the coated tablet, are brought into contact with moistened gas until the trihydrate has substantially formed.
 4. The method as claimed in claim 3, characterized in that air is employed as gas.
 5. The method as claimed in claims 3 and 5, characterized in that the gas employed has a relative humidity of from 35% to 100%.
 6. A medicament obtainable by the method as claimed in at least one of claims 1 to
 5. 7. A coated tablet obtainable by the method as claimed in claims 2 to
 5. 8. A medicament as claimed in either of claims 6 and 7 for the treatment and/or prophylaxis of sexual dysfunctions.
 9. A medicament as claimed in either of claims 6 and 7 for the treatment and/or prophylaxis of erectile dysfunction.
 10. The use of a medicament as claimed in either of claims 6 and 7 for the treatment and/or prophylaxis of erectile dysfunction. 